CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ENERGY PRICE MANIPULATION CONTINUES ON TWO FRONTS”
Anyone who thought
manipulation of California energy prices ended with the criminal penalties
assessed against executives of companies like Enron and Williams Energy after
the state’s 2000-2001 electricity crunch turns out to have been hopelessly
naïve.
All the available
evidence now suggests price-fixing continues not only in electric power, but
that gasoline is also in play. Those who believe that isn’t important to every
Californian just haven’t been watching. For when companies talk about the
difficulties some have conducting business economically here, they don’t just
talk about the traditional right-wing bugaboos of regulations and taxes, but
also electricity prices and the fact gasoline costs more here than almost
anywhere else in America.
One recent example
was Intel, the premium maker of computer chips and other electronic items. The
company announced the other day it will build its next factory in Oregon
largely because its electricity bill there will be as much as 60 percent lower
than it would be here.
Over a decade, that
can represent more than $1 billion, plenty of motivation for any company in a
location decision.
It’s easy and
facile to say power prices here are high because of regulations. While it’s
correct that rules on smog and renewable power cost electricity producers
plenty, that’s only a part of the price picture. Manipulation is another.
Sadly, it’s impossible to know the full extent of market and price
manipulation, because authorities only know about the crooks they catch.
But make no
mistake, the companies then-Gov. Gray Davis labeled “out-of-state buccaneers” a
decade ago in the months of rolling blackouts and rising prices – and others
like them – are still at work.
The latest to be
caught was Florida’s Gila River Power, a subsidiary of Entegra Power Group,
which in November admitted violating the anti-manipulation rule established in
2005 by Congress and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, paying a $2.5
million fine. That was far less than the firm made in selling power to
California’s Independent System Operator from its 2,200-megawatt plant in the
desert southwest of Phoenix.
At about the same
time, California electricity officials reported that Wall Street behemoth
JPMorgan Chase & Co. is blocking a power plant conversion project that
would allow production of far more juice from two AES Corp. Huntington Beach
generating stations it partially controls. Failing to allow the conversions,
needed to preserve energy reliability while the San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station is shut down, could create shortages and drive up the price of power
all over California next summer.
The move by Morgan
came as the state ISO and the federal commission pursued separate charges that
Morgan used improper wholesale trading methods to bilk California consumers of
$73 million last year. As part of that case, FERC has suspended Morgan’s
electricity trading operation for six months.
Things are not much
different in gasoline, where steep price hikes occurred in September and
October, allegedly because of shortages caused by a refinery fire and several
maintenance shutdowns.
But an independent
Oregon consulting firm, McCullough Research, afterward examined thousands of
oil company documents and discovered some refineries were not really shuttered
when the companies claimed they were. In one charge, the McCullough report said
Shell Oil’s Martinez plant – supposedly contributing to a gasoline shortage
because it was down for maintenance for two weeks in May – actually operated
for at least a week of that time. Nitrogen oxide emission documents indicate
the refinery was back to normal at least that long.
Shell says it never
claimed the entire facility was closed, but only most of it.
Similar
environmental records indicated Chevron’s Richmond refinery, hit by a fire and
explosion Aug. 6, did not shut down completely in May for maintenance, as the
company reported it had.
McCullough also
reported that the price spike was about 66 cents per gallon higher than what
would be expected from oil price and gasoline inventory conditions.
That led the
Consumer Watchdog advocacy group to contend oil companies falsified information
to help boost prices. Consumer Watchdog wants an investigation by state Atty.
Gen. Kamala Harris.
If the allegations
are true, said Consumer Watchdog, “it is criminal conduct reminiscent of the
Enron manipulation of the California energy market.”
No oil company ever
paid a penalty when similar price fixing was alleged in the 1970s, ‘80s and
‘90s.
The bottom line is
that if, as Thomas Jefferson is often reported to have said, “Eternal vigilance
is the price of liberty,” then surely eternal vigilance also is the only way to
prevent price gouging in the California operations of energy companies of many
sorts.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book,
"The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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